AT&T recently outlined how AI is poised to reshape the way emergency call centres operate. These changes come as emergency services operators face rising call volumes, in increasingly complex situations.
Writing in a company blog, AT&T executive Matt Walsh, AVP of FirstNet and the mobile operator’s NextGen 9-1-1 products, stated public safety answering points (PSAPs) are under mounting pressure as emergencies grow more complicated and expectations for speed and accuracy climb.
He explained AI tools are increasingly part of the conversation, but only if the underlying emergency systems are modern enough to support them.
AT&T has been developing NG9-1-1 as part of a broader emergency-services modernisation effort for several years.
The system replaces legacy, analogue-based 911 networks with IP- and cloud-based infrastructure capable of handling text, video and richer location data, in addition to traditional voice calls.
The transition to NG9-1-1 is becoming increasingly critical as AI applications enter the emergency-response environment, because older infrastructure was never designed to support them.
Among the clearest AI use cases, Walsh pointed to near real-time transcription and translation tools. These can help call takers, who are simultaneously listening, typing, and prioritising during a call, quickly search and tag important details without replaying recordings, and communicate faster with callers who speak other languages.
AI is also being explored to manage call surges during major incidents, especially when duplicate calls about the same event can overwhelm staff.
Using geofenced, AI-driven interactive voice response, non-emergency callers in an active incident area can be informed that responders are already aware, freeing up call takers for more urgent calls. Walsh emphasised the tool doesn’t block anyone from reaching a live dispatcher.
He framed both capabilities as building on, rather than replacing, trained call-centre staff, and stated they depend on the broader shift to NG9-1-1’s flexible, cloud-based foundation.
AT&T also recently upgraded the portal for its ESInet emergency communications platform, consolidating dashboards, reporting and administrative tools to simplify daily operations for PSAPs, Walsh noted.
“As interest in AI grows, the agencies best positioned to take advantage of it will be the ones that have already invested in modernising their emergency communications infrastructure with partners that have the experience, scale and public safety focus to help them get there”, he argued.
Source: Mobile World Live
Image Credit: AT&T
Source: Tahawul Tech


